This is actually huge news and a
direct commercial solution to a major problem.
Grain production produces an awful lot of straw for which there has ever
been a scant market. How we have a natural
home for all of it.
This will put it squarely into
the private garden. It is just too easy
and too useful. You have to manage the watering and that is the definition of private gardening. Better yet it is a natural way to produce
robust yields without fighting an unending weed problem.
I particularly like potatoes
here. The roots spread downward and fill
up the bale with potatoes. These are easily harvested at the end of season by simply breaking open the bale. On the same bale I would also plant climbing
tomatoes.
This will become a revolution in
agriculture simply because we suddenly have a premium market for straw. It is also already growing fast.
Straw bale gardening catches on because of ease
Published: Saturday, May. 25, 2013 - 12:00 am
The hardest part of straw bale gardening may be finding the straw.
"I've talked to lots of feed stores; they can't keep the bales in
stock," said author Joel Karsten. "Everybody wants them for
gardens."
From his Minnesota
home base, Karsten has become the nation's straw bale gardening guru.
His new book – "Straw
Bale Gardens :
The Breakthrough Method for Growing Vegetables Anywhere, Earlier and With No
Weeding" (Cool Springs Press, 144 pages, $19.99) – debuted this spring and
immediately hit Amazon's list of best- selling garden books.
"I've been doing this for 20 years," said Karsten, who was
initially inspired by straw bales on his family's farm. "For the first 14,
I couldn't get anybody to care about it no matter what I did. But in the past
six years, it's just exploded.
"People see it and they're fascinated by it."
That includes us. We're trying a couple of straw bale gardens this
summer. (See our SacBee
Garden page on Facebook
for updates on their progress: www.facebook.com/SacBeeGarden.)
Straw bales caught on along with renewed interest in vegetable
gardening. They're basically a form of raised-bed gardening, but without the
expense of constructing conventional beds.
For home gardeners, they have several potential pluses: Straw bales
offer a fresh growing medium each year, which means no lingering disease or
pests. They don't need soil, either.
"On our Facebook page, you can see them growing in parking lots,
right on the asphalt," Karsten said in a phone interview. "You could
do one on a rooftop."
In colder climates, straw bales allow gardeners to plant summer
vegetables earlier because the straw releases heat as it decomposes, warming
the roots of young transplants and seedlings. That's also a plus for winter
gardens in Sacramento ,
where straw bales can be used year round.
Karsten explained with a chuckle one big advantage straw bales have
over other growing mediums: "No weeding, no weeding, no weeding.
"For most people, that tops the list of what they're looking for
in a perfect vegetable garden."
Weeds defeat many gardens – especially for newbie vegetable gardeners.
"With straw bales, it's impossible to fail," Karsten said,
"if you follow directions."
There's the catch – you can't just poke your potatoes into the bale and
expect them to flourish.
Straw bales need a little TLC before they become dynamic garden beds.
"No. 1 thing to remember: Start with straw, not hay," Karsten
said. "That seems elementary, but it's not obvious – especially if you're
not familiar with straw."
Hay is harvested while still green and full of grain (which will sprout
or rot if used in gardening).
A byproduct of grain farming, straw – the leftover dried stalks – is
meant for animal bedding or mulching, not food. Sacramento straw comes primarily from rice or
oats.
"Straw bales must be well conditioned for gardening," Karsten
continued. "You can't just plant plants in a bale without treating it
beforehand. Anything you plant in plain straw will die."
The conditioning process takes 12 to 14 days. During that time, the
bale needs to be watered every day. That aids the internal-composting process.
Straw's ability to hold water is another benefit for gardeners. It
keeps plants' roots evenly moist.
"A saturated bale holds six to eight gallons of water,"
Karsten said. "It's impossible to drown a bale, too. The excess runs
out."
Once conditioned, the bales become a high-yield, nurturing environment,
perfect for many summer vegetables.
"You'll never grow better tomatoes," he said.
"Strawberries and melons are great. Potatoes can do exceptionally, too.
And they're so easy to harvest – just cut the strings and knock over the
bale."
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